As many of you know, NOT IN OUR TOWN PRINCETON is a multi-racial, multi-faith group of individuals who stand together for racial justice and inclusive communities. Our focus is to promote the equitable treatment of all, and to uncover and confront white supremacy — a system which manipulates and pits all races and ethnicities against each other.

Our goal is to identify and expose the political, economic, and cultural systems which have enabled white supremacy to flourish, and to create new structures and policies which will ensure equity and inclusion for all. In our commitment to uncovering the blight of white supremacy on our humanity, we take responsibility to address it and eliminate it in all its forms through intentional action, starting with ourselves and our communities.

Below is a list of our four most recent programs; watch this space for what to look forward to!

At the Wyck House, 6026 Germantown Avenue Philadelphia PA, join friends and neighbors for an afternoon of thoughtful consideration of the lives of women who lived through enslavement in America. The Harriet Tubman Living History Experience highlights and heightens public awareness of the Underground Railroad, Civil War, and the life of one of the 19th century’s most celebrated figures: Harriet Tubman.

After the Harriet Tubman Experience, guests will have the opportunity to hear Gwen Ragsdale, curator of Germantown’s Lest We Forget Slavery Museum, read a selection from her fascinating and highly relevant book, Peculiar Relationships: A Fictional Novel That Describes the Evolving Relationships Between Black Women and White Women from Slavery to Current Day (2014).

Saturday, March 23, 2:00PM – 3:45PM Telephone: 215-848-1690

$25; Friends of Wyck $20; Students under 25 $10. This program is strongly recommended for ages 9 and older.

Ryan Haygood, the president and CEO of the New Jersey Institute for Social Justice, will discuss the “Movement for the 94%” at the next meeting of Indivisible Princeton on Monday, March 25 at 7:30 p.m. at UUCP Princeton, 50 Cherry Hill Road, Princeton.

The movement is intended to hold Gov. Phil Murphy accountable to the 94 percent of African Americans who voted for him in the last election, as well as the New Jersey state legislature. The movement is centered around criminal justice and other issues. These include: transforming the New Jersey youth justice system in which a black child is 30 times more likely to be incarcerated than a white child; restoring the right to vote to people with criminal convictions, and closing the racial wage gap.

Richardson Auditorium, 8:00 pm

Anita Hill is University Professor of Social Policy, Law, and Women’s, Gender and Sexuality Studies at Brandeis University. Professor Hill’s commentary, which has been published in TIME, Newsweek, The New York Times,The Boston Globe, andMs. Magazine, includes a September, 2018 column in The New York Times addressing how the Senate Judiciary Committee should conduct the Kavanaugh hearings to avoid the mistakes of the 1991 Clarence Thomas hearings.

*This is a ticketed event* For more details and information on how to obtain a free ticket, click here.